When it comes to financial software, businesses that have outgrown spreadsheets or accounting systems like Xero, MYOB AccountRight and QuickBooks, as well as those running legacy on-premises systems that no longer fit their needs, have a wealth of options.

Most of the systems being implemented today are cloud-based ERP solutions, and there are a number of software vendors in the marketplace. This article examines two of the cloud ERP systems available, NetSuite and MYOB Advanced, and the key differences between them.

What Is ERP?

Enterprise resource planning (ERP) is centralised software that manages the core processes of a business, including financials and accounting, order management, inventory management, human resources and more.

In a cloud ERP system, the software vendor manages the database, servers and data centre infrastructure and customers access the software via the internet. In some cases, vendors run separate ERP instances for each customer, known as hosting. Software as a Service (SaaS) ERP systems are multi-tenant, meaning that the vendor runs one application with customer data separated at the database level, which creates greater economies of scale.

NetSuite vs. MYOB Advanced: An Overview

NetSuite and MYOB Advanced are both cloud-based ERP systems, meaning the software is maintained and updated by the software vendor and accessed by the customer via a web browser. However, MYOB Advanced is based on an on-premises architecture; more on this in the deployment section below.

Generally speaking, NetSuite is better suited for growing businesses and offers international business, capabilities that MYOB Advanced struggles with, including multi-subsidiary consolidation, multi-currency and multi-language capabilities and compliance with international taxes and regulations. NetSuite also makes building custom reports easier for everyday users who are not developers.

Product Maturity and History

Evan Goldberg, an early Oracle employee who went on to become an entrepreneur and Larry Ellison, the founder of Oracle, co-founded NetSuite in 1998 as a software suite intended to run an entire business. Their strong technical backgrounds helped make NetSuite, along with Salesforce.com, the first cloud-based software companies. NetSuite was the first cloud ERP system on the market.

In 2016, NetSuite was acquired by Oracle for $9.3 billion, and the company is now run as a separate business unit within Oracle. Backed by Oracle, NetSuite was able to more quickly expand its international operations and open new data centres that use the Oracle Cloud Infrastructure.

After 22 years in business, NetSuite now serves more than 28,000 customers in more than 200 countries and territories.

MYOB Advanced was founded in 2008 by John Howell, Serguei Beloussov and Mike Chtchelkonogov, who worked at Parallels and brought six team members over with them. Many of the early leaders had backgrounds with Microsoft’s Solomon ERP system in the software reseller channel. Since 2014, MYOB Advanced’s CEO has been Jon Roskill, who formerly ran Microsoft’s partner program. It was acquired by private equity fund EQT Partners in 2019.

It counts 10,000 customers.

Acumatica is represented in Australia and New Zealand through MYOB since 2013. MYOB was founded in 1991 and provides a range of accounting, payroll, tax and ERP products to the local market. Since establishment MYOB has gone through numerous rounds of being owned by PE firms and listing on the ASX. It was acquired by private equity fund KKR in 2019.

MYOB sells, supports and hosts Acumatica under the brand name MYOB Advanced. MYOB do not own the Acumatica product nor the product development and evolution. MYOB does localise Acumatica and the update cycle is approximately 6 months behind Acumatica.

NetSuite vs. MYOB Advanced: Vertical Industries

Processes, workflows and data demands vary greatly by industry. Most ERP software vendors offer industry-specific editions as well as the ability to customise the software to meet the specific needs a business might have.

NetSuite’s core industries include:

  • Distribution
  • Manufacturing
  • Services
  • Retail and ecommerce
  • Nonprofits
  • Advertising, media and publishing

NetSuite offers an array of versions for what it calls microverticals in areas including apparel, footwear and accessories; restaurants; food and beverage manufacturing; health and beauty; and more.

MYOB Advanced has dedicated industry editions for:

  • Distribution
  • Manufacturing
  • Field Service
  • Construction

MYOB Advanced has customers in other industries as well and says customers can build out capabilities specific to their industry or business that they may need with Acumatica xRP, a customisation platform that runs on Microsoft developer tools.

NetSuite vs. MYOB Advanced

NetSuite and MYOB Advanced have comparable functionality across a number of different modules, however, NetSuite simply offers more. Most importantly, NetSuite is the preferred vendor for fast-growing businesses. NetSuite is built with real-time data entry, while MYOB Advanced uses batch-based entry at the subledger level, which can make reporting difficult. Once a company expands internationally, the differences become starker. MYOB Advanced cannot support multiple languages, multiple currencies and foreign regulatory and tax laws the way that NetSuite can, limiting visibility and creating significant manual work when transacting in other currencies and conducting financial consolidation.

Finally, history in the market is an area where the two software companies are different. As a result of its long history in cloud ERP, NetSuite has a much larger customer base and partner channel.

Comparison Matrix

Feature Comparison NetSuite MYOB Advanced
Core Financials
Project Accounting
Inventory Management
Warehouse Management
CRM
Ecommerce  
Multi-currency, multi-language
Subsidiary Management
PSA  
Support Company and partner Company and partner

How NetSuite Compares to MYOB Advanced

Both NetSuite and MYOB Advanced offer core ERP capabilities across financial, customer, product and services processes. NetSuite generally provides richer functionality and a greater ability to scale with a customer’s growth, while MYOB Advanced tends to appeal to smaller businesses without the need for advanced functionality.

Here’s how NetSuite and MYOB Advanced compare in features and functionality:

Financial Management

Both vendors provide the core financial management capabilities that go into ERP, including general ledger, accounts receivable, accounts payable, cash management, currency management, tax management, deferred revenue accounting, intercompany accounting and intercompany reconciliation, recurring revenue management, billing, fixed assets and payroll management.

NetSuite does offer some core accounting functionality that MYOB Advanced does not. NetSuite allows customers to keep more than one book, referred to as multi-book accounting. Businesses that need to give different accounting treatments to the same business event, either because of industry-specific, country- or region-specific accounting rules, or some combination thereof, can do that in NetSuite and remain in compliance with regulations. Keeping multiple sets of books in parallel allows for easier reporting for compliance. Without multi-book capabilities as part of the ERP software, accountants are forced into error-prone and cumbersome manual processes.

NetSuite also allows customers to customise their general ledger (GL). For many businesses, the general ledger is no longer a static entity. Traditionally, ERP systems provide a hard-coded set of transaction types such as vendor bills, customer invoices and inbound/outbound payments that are rigidly reflected in the general ledger, limiting the business’s ability to see and understand their GL impact.

Customisations related to the GL typically required a third-party IT consulting team to change the core code of the application, which can be costly and create risk. With NetSuite, businesses can: add custom general ledger lines to standard transactions to avoid manual journal entries; create custom transaction types to create new business processes that can impact the general ledger, such as accruals for vendor bills; and create custom general ledger segments that users can tag to demonstrate the impact of transactions and improve flexibility and results from reporting and analytics.

The way the two systems are architected is also a point of differentiation. MYOB Advanced relies heavily on batch processing, which can slow down reporting and analytics. NetSuite’s architecture allows it to easily analyse large numbers of transactions.

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International Management

NetSuite offers some capabilities MYOB Advanced does not that are particularly important for businesses with international operations or those that hope to expand internationally. NetSuite provides the ability to transact in more than 190 currencies and 27 different languages. In fact, NetSuite has been deployed in more than 200 countries and dependent territories. MYOB Advanced customers need to manually perform currency revaluations in the system and, while there are built in localisation and translation tools, they are rudimentary and customers must rely on local partners for the functionality they need.

Similarly, NetSuite provides multi-subsidiary management, allowing a business with multiple subsidiaries and legal entities to manage the entire portfolio of their business within a single instance of NetSuite.

Additionally, because of its lack of multibook accounting mentioned earlier, MYOB Advanced cannot support international businesses that need to comply with the U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) and the international financial reporting standards (IFRS).

CRM

Both vendors offer CRM capabilities, including sales force automation, integrated marketing, service and support automation and a customer self-service portal.

NetSuite also offers a partner relationship management feature.

Reporting and Analytics

Both vendors offer prebuilt reports, business intelligence and analytics and dashboards.

Both vendors also offer self-service reporting, but MYOB Advanced is limited in the workflow and customisation that can be done without users needing to write code.

However, MYOB Advanced’s subledger architecture impacts reporting. Subledgers are a series of transactions grouped by type, such as accounts receivable or accounts payable. Because subledger architectures are designed to pull certain transaction types but leave others out, this creates reporting challenges. The detailed data is ultimately stored at the subledger level and a summary is pushed up to the GL through the batch process. To drill down to access that detailed data from reports, which pull from the GL, requires drilling into the subledger to access data on customers, vendors or projects, and building out more reports. This is significantly more cumbersome than NetSuite’s architecture, which stores all transactions on a single database, meaning everything in the system is updated in real time and there is no need to run batch jobs to update the books. With NetSuite, when a user needs to access information on a customer, they can conduct a global search and access all the information for that customer in a single view. With a subledger architecture, they would need multiple screen tabs and reports to produce a similar result. MYOB Advanced customers frequently use a 3rd party reporting tool to enhance the on-product reporting deficiencies.

The subledger architecture also impacts the close process. With batch processing of the subledger, extra time and effort is required to review of all the transactions and approve them for summary entry to the GL. With NetSuite, the GL is updated in real-time with no need to review transactions. This allows businesses to more easily undertake newer financial strategies like the continuous close.

Project Accounting

Both vendors offer project cost tracking, advanced billing and time and expense management, and project management

NetSuite offers a professional services automation (PSA) module, which also includes resource management.

Deployment Options and Infrastructure Considerations

MYOB Advanced and NetSuite are both cloud-based ERP systems. MYOB Advanced offers a cloud (hosted) option, while NetSuite uses a traditional software as a service (SaaS) multitenant cloud deployment. NetSuite customers benefit from the economies of scale and automatic upgrades that carry customisations forward.

Since its acquisition by Oracle, NetSuite has begun moving its platform to 18 Oracle Cloud Infrastructure data centres around the globe, including Australia. By using Oracle’s Gen 2 Cloud infrastructure, NetSuite is able to offer greater security, availability, scalability, expandability and certified to the strictest security standards. It also offers a path to the Oracle Autonomous Database and artificial intelligence.

MYOB Advanced is hosted on Amazon Web Services and runs on the MySQL Server Database. MYOB states that they comply with global security standards but have not published their certification on their website.

Integration

NetSuite’s SuiteCloud is a multi-tenant cloud platform. It’s based on the JavaScript programming language and provides an integrated development environment (IDE) and application programming interfaces (APIs) to build applications on the platform. Integrations are accomplished through APIs or SuiteTalk, NetSuite’s SOAP-based web services platform that enables cloud or on-premises applications to integrate with NetSuite directly. It also includes SuiteBuilder for point-and-click customisation of forms, a workflow manager, an Eclipse IDE and a development framework.

MYOB Advanced runs on its Acumatica xRP Cloud Platform, which also runs REST and SOAP-based web services with support for the .NET framework, Microsoft’s Visual Studio, C# and ASP.net.

Partner Ecosystem

No software vendor can provide all the functionality that thousands of individual businesses in myriad industries require. That’s where customisation capabilities and the partner ecosystem become key. Partners fill gaps in the core software by either integrating with the software or building out specific department- or industry-focused functionality.

Both NetSuite and MYOB Advanced sell directly and rely on partners. Given NetSuite’s maturity, it has a much more robust direct sales business and predictable partner ecosystem. NetSuite’s reach supports businesses who want to expand internationally. MYOB is attempting to build a direct business through the acquisition of partners. MYOB Direct and its partners operate only in Australia and New Zealand.

The SuiteApp.com marketplace features more than 570 add-on applications that are either built on the NetSuite platform or tightly integrated.

In addition to SuiteApp partners, or sometimes in conjunction, NetSuite also has a large number of Solution Partners, which provide consulting and implementation services, often by region or industry. NetSuite also offers business process outsourcing (BPO) partnerships for companies that want to outsource accounting, customer service or ecommerce operations.

MYOB Advanced has less than 100 partners on its MYOB Marketplace.

Implementation and Support Services

Implementation and support are key considerations in any ERP purchasing decision, and this is another area of significant difference between NetSuite and MYOB Advanced.

NetSuite offers implementation and support services through its professional services and support teams, respectively, as well as through partners, which tend to be regional or specialists in specific industries. In either case, customers get 24×7 support from NetSuite support services around the globe. NetSuite, as the product vendor, also invests in the long term success of every customer by maintaining a dedicated relationship with every customer of NetSuite

NetSuite has developed a specialised engagement, implementation and support methodology, called SuiteSuccess, that is based on its two decades of experience implementing its software and working with more than 28,000 customers in a wide range of industries. SuiteSuccess incorporates best practices garnered from that experience: Industry- and role-based dashboards, workflows and permissions can get a company up and running with an ERP system in as little as 90 days. NetSuite’s partners have also been trained on SuiteSuccess.

MYOB Advanced does not incorporate best practice, nor pre-built assets. MYOB Advanced is implemented from the ground up for every customer. MYOB does not have a common methodology across their Direct and Channel business. Every touch point that a customer has with MYOB or its partners will be different and unpredictable. MYOB does not have a client management organisation that works with customers long term whether they stem from a Direct or Partner sale. Support is constrained to the skill, availability and reach of a MYOB partner.

Why You Should Choose NetSuite

When it comes to cloud-based ERP, NetSuite and MYOB Advanced are frequently on the short list of applications under consideration. Companies that choose NetSuite over MYOB Advanced often cite reporting, support, the ability of the software to scale with the customer and the best practices garnered from the depth and breadth of its customer base. Companies that choose MYOB Advanced are often looking for a functional product to address today’s challenges.